RECYCLING: A Barn Reborn
Mar 1, 2002 12:00 PM
Kim A. O'Connell
Every morning, John High climbs into his pickup truck and
drives to job sites in Pennsylvania, New Jersey or Delaware
to save doomed barns from the landfill. His motto: To save
every barn he possibly can.
As part of the Barn Saver Project he started in 1990, High
uses crowbars and hammers to dismantle barns that are destined
for demolition. Typically, barns are demolished with heavy
machinery and sent to landfills. But recognizing the value
in every piece of the old structures, High left his job
at an excavating company — where he bulldozed old
houses and barns to make room for development — and
began disassembling old barns piece by piece to save the
flooring, siding, windows, doors, roofing, beams, joists,
hardware and even the contents, such as lightning rods
and pig troughs.
In the 10 years that the Barn Saver Project has been in operation,
more than 200 barns and houses have been salvaged. Between
90 percent and 100 percent of every barn is saved, High
says…
A network of contractors, such as Hometown Carpentry, a Boyertown,
Pa., company that specializes in barn restoration, helps
to find dismantled barn buyers. For instance, when Hometown
Carpentry owner Jim Slabonik is looking for a particular
kind of material to restore a historic barn, he lets High
know. Conversely, after dismantling a barn, High will let
Slabonik and other contractors know what materials he has
salvaged.
“It's a growing industry and there are a lot of people utilizing these
old materials,” Slabonik says. “People who have old barns want
to keep them looking like they did 150 or 200 years ago.”
Deconstruction can take weeks to complete — usually
longer than the standard one- to five-day demolition job.
However, deconstruction costs a fraction of demolition on
average, High notes.
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